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The Low Anthem Tour Dates

LOW ANTHEM CONTINUE WORLD TOUR WITH WEST COAST DEBUT, DATES WITH BLIND PILOT


The Low Anthem

It’s been a banner year for The Low Anthem. In addition to being JamBase’s New Favorite Artist this month, the Rhode Island trio spent the greater part of the year touring with acts such as Elvis Perkins In Dearland, Joe Pug, Ray LaMontagne, Josh Ritter, and Langhorne Slim in support of their highly praised Nonesuch debut, Oh My God, Charlie Darwin, the band is gearing up for yet another stretch on the road, this time with the Portland group Blind Pilot. This run of 21 club and theater dates begins October 15 and continues through November 12 and includes the band’s West coast debut. Additionally, The Low Anthem will return to NYC for a performance at the Bell House at the end of August and travel to Europe for a month-long tour in September, where they’ve already played to much enthusiasm at Glastonbury, sold out a show at Union Chapel in London, and received stellar reviews in Uncut, Q, Mojo, NME, The Guardian, and The Independent.

The very special Avon Cinema in Providence, RI is hosting the first October U.S. tour date. The Cinema is a beautiful old movie theatre, the perfect setting for the band’s anticipated homecoming show and largest performance in Providence to date. The band will also be playing a free show on Block Island, where they recorded Charlie Darwin.

The Low Anthem’s most recent tour has taken them through a number of prestigious festivals, including Bonnaroo, Glastonbury, Lollapalooza, and the recent 50th Anniversary of the Newport Folk Festival, where they had humble beginnings working as recycling crew. This time around they got to share the stage with some of their heroes, including Pete Seeger, Arlo Guthrie, and Gilian Welch during a group sing-along.

THE LOW ANTHEM PRESS:

“Only a band since 2006, the depth of songwriting and ability to cross the dusty Americana landscape from such burdened acoustic folk songs like “To Ohio” to country barnburners, delicate three-part harmonies dripping with reverb, a Tom Waits cover, and soul-saving gospel without loosing continuity makes The Low Anthem worthy of all the hype they are sure to receive…” – JamBase

“Stately… Lyrics contemplating faith, loss, destruction and self-destruction.” – New York Times


“One of the breakthrough albums of 2009… A highly eventful journey into American songcraft, variously echoing Dylan, Springsteen, The Band, and Tom Waits.” – MOJO


“Really beautiful… The great music, it’s not what you play; it’s what you don’t play.” – Billy Bragg (PROJO)

THE LOW ANTHEM ON TOUR:

08.13 Chapel Hill, NC Local 506

08.14 Richmond, VA The Canal Club – Downstairs Lounge

08.15 Baltimore, MD Ottobar w/Langhorne Slim

08.16 Philadelphia, PA Philly Folk Festival

08.17 Pittsfield, MA Stage 2 – Word X Word Festival

08.18 Block Island, RI Captain Nick’s

08.27 Fall River, MA Narrows Center For the Arts

08.29 Plymouth, MA Plymouth Waterfront Festival

09.03 Dublin, IRELAND Gaiety Theatre w/Ray LaMontagne

09.04 Dublin, IRELAND Gaiety Theatre w/Ray LaMontagne

09.05 Stradbelly, IRELAND Electric Picnic Festival

09.06 Manchester, UK Deaf Institute

09.08 Newcastle, UK Cluny

09.09 Birmingham, UK Glee Club

09.10 Oxford, UK Bullingdon Arms

09.11 Larmer Tree Gardens, UK End of the Road Festival

09.12 Larmer Tree Gardens, UK End of the Road Festival

09.13 Isle of Wight Bestival

09.15 Munich, GERMANY Atomic Cafe

09.16 Milan, ITALY La Salumeria Della Musica

09.17 Zurich, SWITZERLAND El Lokal

09.18 Frankfurt, GERMANY Broftabrik

09.19 Koln, GERMANY Gebaude 9

09.20 Berlin, GERMANY Lido

09.21 Hamburg, GERMANY Knust

09.23 Amsterdam, NETHERLANDS De Duif

09.24 Brussels, BELGIUM Ancienne Belgique

09.25 Nijmegen, NETHERLANDS Doornroosje

09.26 Paris, FRANCE La Maroquinerie

10.02 Austin, TX Austin City Limits

10.15 Providence, RI Avon Cinema

10.17 Seattle, WA Chop Suey

10.18 Portland, OR Lola’s Room at the Crystal Ballroom

10.19 Eugene, OR WOW Hall*

10.21 San Francisco, CA Great American Music Hall*

10.23 Los Angeles, CA Troubadour*

10.24 San Diego, CA Casbah*

10.25 Tucson, AZ Plush*

10.27 Austin, TX The Parish*

10.28 Dallas, TX Granada Theater*

10.29 Houston, TX Bronze Peacock at HOB*

10.30 Baton Rouge, LA Spanish Moon*

11.02 Tallahassee, FL Club Downunder*

11.03 Orlando, FL The Social*

11.04 Atlanta, GA The Earl*

11.05 Nashville, TN Mercy Lounge*

11.06 Asheville, NC University of North Carolina*

11.07 Norfolk, VA Attucks Theater*

11.09 Carrboro, NC Cats Cradle*

11.11 Washington, D.C. The Black Cat*

11.12 Boston, MA Paradise*

*with Blind Pilot



FloydFest 8: Revival | 07.23 – 07.26 | Floyd, VA

Words & Images by: Stratton Lawrence

FloydFest 8: Revival :: 07.23.09 – 07.26.09 :: Blue Cow Pavilion :: Floyd, VA

FloydFest 8

Fancy Gap. Meadows of Dan. Rolling up the Blue Ridge Parkway to FloydFest, even the names of towns ease one into a more simple time and place. Cell phones stop working long before we arrive, and weaving through lush, narrow hollows, the road is wet from a just-passed rain cloud. Turning a corner, one catches a first glimpse of the idyllic ridgeline and valley adorned with wooden stages and all manner of art, fancy and merriment as the sun shines brightly down on a perfect mid-70 degree afternoon. FloydFest’s magic is evident before even stepping through the front gate.

Thursday, 07.24

After catching a moment of The Old Ceremony‘s opening set, Nathan Moore‘s solo set was first on the official agenda. Moore wittily sang about wanting to be the next Abbie Hoffman and how to “survive some grizzly summer learning which berries are safe to eat.” The songwriter only learned that he was part of FloydFest’s “Emerging Artist” competition as he took the stage. “If anyone needs ice or their tent set up after the show, just call me gopher,” he joked. “I’ll draw the line, but not where you think I would.” Moore’s style, reminiscent of Greg Brown, worked well with tales like the time he spotted Drew Emmitt on the street, then ran alongside him, singing. The weekend’s first magical moment came when a particularly stiff breeze rustled the grass and trees behind the stage just as Moore sang about “each way the wild wind blows.”

Nathan Moore :: FloydFest 8

Emmitt himself, along with Billy Nershi and band, provided the evening’s next highlight with a set that peaked during a tremendous cover of Dylan’s “The Mighty Quinn.” The two veterans showed off the instincts that set them above the pack, masterfully handing off the solos to the next player in line. Dressed in a psychedelic purple shirt and gold Mardi Gras beads, Emmitt was clearly having a ball. The band ended the show by inviting Jason Hann on stage for a song by bassist Tyler Grant (the 2008 National Flatpicking Guitar Champion), before a rollicking “Restless Wind.” About midway through the show, a woman in the front row offered up a bottle of tequila to Nershi, but it was snatched away by security as he leaned forward to take it. After the show, Michael Kang emerged from the side-stage, smiling big as he handed Billy the bottle.

For those String Cheese Incident fans hoping for some collaborative work between the members present at FloydFest, Thursday may have been a disappointment. Panjea, Kang’s post-SCI project, entertained with their worldly funk grooves, but the music never came close to the epic peaks of String Cheese lore. Nershi watched from the side, but never joined them on stage.

Emmitt-Nershi Band :: FloydFest 8

It’s obviously difficult to be the frontman in a band where you’re not the biggest name, but Panjea’s lead vocalist Chris Berry becomes borderline obnoxious at times. The songs’ messages were poignant (“Why do we kill people who kill people to show people that killing people is wrong?”) but the over-the-top dancing and frantic jumping between congas and the microphone by Berry was distracting and may actually hold the very capable band (Kang and Berry plus sax, bass, drums) from reaching musical points they otherwise might reach.

The night ended with a third String Cheese offshoot, EOTO on the Hill Holler Stage. Billy Nershi sat on the grass near the back and watched, and the dichotomy between his epic acoustic build-ups and the monotonous, electronic ramblings of EOTO was striking. Nershi said that SCI loved playing together at Rothbury and that he believes it’ll happen again before too long. “We talked about it and understand that we all need to give each other latitude to explore our own pursuits on stage,” he said.

Walking back to camp, a meteor shower decorated the night sky, ripping across the intensely bright Milky Way. Witnessing three String Cheese products in a row proved insightful. Despite all the skills Kang, Hann and Michael Travis possess, Emmitt-Nershi Band sounded the most like a real band, utilizing all their members and together taking the sound to exciting places.

Continue reading for Friday’s coverage of FloydFest…

Friday, 07.24

Friday, in order of the significant memories…

Holy Ghost Tent Revival :: FloydFest 8

Is any band more qualified to pull off a cover of “White Rabbit” than Grace Potter and the Nocturnals? Potter’s voice is simply unreal, much like the Grace that originally sang about that strange bunny. After an intensely rocking, tight set, during which Potter floated from the piano to the mic to a Flying V guitar, the “one more” encore stretched into five songs, including a goose-bump inducing solo rendition of Dylan’s “I Shall Be Released” and the aforementioned “White Rabbit.”

Potter’s set could not have been more perfectly placed, lighting up the festival with an over-the-top rock show that followed nearly two hours of festival-wide power outage. The lights and sound died at sunset, just as Toubab Krewe was kicking off their Hill Holler Stage show. Toubab compensated with a 30-minute drum session, and many late arriving folks were none the wiser about the power situation.

When the lights didn’t come back up, however, the buzz passed around about whether we’d hear any more electric music that night. It likely wouldn’t have mattered, as bands festival wide grabbed their gear and set up acoustic shows across the main field. Boulder Acoustic Society perhaps benefited most, turning their scheduled beer garden set into an intimate, sing-along affair lit by torches. Out in the field, crowds gathered around the Holy Ghost Tent Revival and The Smart Brothers as they busked in the grass.

Pransky & Smith – Toubab Krewe :: FloydFest 8

After leaving the stage to wait for the power to return, Toubab eventually reemerged in the dark. Flashlights from the crowd illuminated them as Jamaican legend Earl “Chinna” Smith joined them for a long medley of percussion and reggae standards including “Kaya.”

If the power had never returned, festival-goers would have been hard-pressed to complain about the sheer magnitude of the music that preceded the outage during the daytime. Last year’s emerging artist contest winners, William Walter & Co., absolutely raged on the Hill Holler Stage early in the afternoon, including a super-funky rendition of “Chameleon” by the relatively acoustic band.

Holy Ghost Tent Revival’s 3 p.m. set at the beer garden had a crowd dancing like it was twelve hours later, banging their heads to banjo and trombone through one fast song and epic ending after another. Holy Ghost’s keyboard player Mike O’Malley seems to have really found his place in the band, and it’s hard to imagine them without him now.

Yard Dogs Road Show :: FloydFest 8 by Ryan Snyder

For those lucky enough to stumble upon it or already be in the know, Forro in the Dark‘s Workshop Porch set of flute-led Brazilian rumba was phenomenal. The band played seated in a line. Back on the main stage, The Duhks precisely delivered jig and fiddle songs, changing time signatures seamlessly. They are undoubtedly one of the smoothest, tightest acoustic bands playing today.

The early evening hosted a two-genre dance party as The Belleville Outfit entertained an enthusiastic swing-dancing crowd at the dance tent, while Grupo Fantasma‘s 11-piece (including three percussionists) Latin/mambo ensemble had a huge crowd doing the rumba. The grooving beats of “Arroz con Frijoles” segued well into the drum-show of Toubab, as the power died soon after Fantasma wrapped up their show.

If there was a regret on Friday, it was having put my camera away before the Yard Dogs Road Show at 11 p.m. The band (dance troupe? acting ensemble?) is a creative spectacle, complete with sword swallowing, burlesque ladies and Mexican standoffs. Our brains fried by the insanity of it all, we stopped by the Village Stage to shake it with Forro in the Dark once more before heading to camp.

Continue reading for Saturday’s coverage of FloydFest…

Saturday, 07.25

Nathan & The Zydeco Cha Chas

“We usually start at 10 p.m.,” said a groggy-looking Samantha Crain to her late Saturday morning audience. “We had to be here at 10 a.m. I’ll try to wake-up.” She did and woke us up as well with her spunky acoustic rock & roll. Like MerleFest and LEAF, an early slot at Floyd isn’t a lousy gig for the bands – the fans are there for music as early as it starts.

By noon, Saturday reached full-party mode, with Nathan and the Zydeco Cha-Chas urging the main stage audience to “Take off your shoes, because I’m gonna sock it to ya!”

After a quick listen to local hip-hop/funk combo Blount Harvey, the day’s first big dose of excitement came during Yarn‘s set in the beer garden. The band sounds more like Oxford, MS than their hometown of Brooklyn, NY. In song after song, impeccable harmonies gave way to epic build-ups that took flight behind Kang-esque electric mandolin. In the early afternoon on the festival’s smallest stage, the sound Yarn gave their audience could have filled an arena.

Ollabelle, the project of Levon Helm’s daughter Amy Helm, was a bit of a disappointment after Yarn’s soaring spectacle. The band sounded best on covers like “Long Black Veil” and “Corrina, Corrina,” but their energy seemed low and better fit for a smaller venue then their main stage slot.

We soon headed back to the beer garden for Sol Driven Train. The Charleston, SC group played heavy on the horns for what was likely the weekend’s most crowded show in the beer garden, highlighted by a rollicking version of Paul Simon’s “Late in the Evening” and a group drum jam.

Rain clouds approached across the mountains as the day progressed, seemingly playing to a perfect Donna the Buffalo setlist. The deluge began halfway through “40 Days and 40 Nights,” followed by a perfect “Mystic Water.” Although Donna’s set was fairly standard, the rain and subsequent rainbow made the show magical. Tara Nevins led off “Blue Skies” just as the sun peaked back through, destined to remain out the rest of the day.

The Felice Brothers :: FloydFest 8

Saturday’s champions were The Felice Brothers, who ripped the Hill Holler Stage apart like the barn they were apparently raised in. From knocking over drum sets to showering the crowd with water, if the faux-country band can keep up their New York redneck energy as their fame grows they’ll have lasting power. The festival set featured favorites like “Run Chicken Run” and “Penn Station,” which made the crowd scream for more. The Brothers might have obliged them had the drums not been in disarray from fiddler Greg Farley tackling them head first to close the set.

With Toubab’s Friday show cut short by the power outage, the band came out Saturday ready to impress. With very little speaking or intentional stage presence, Justin Perkins focused on the guitar over the kora, almost sounding like Dick Dale at times. Favorite moments included bass player David Pransky donning a wild four-foot-tall hat made of balloons and the tune “Nirvana the Buffalo,” fitting for a set that followed Donna’s show on the same stage.

Although some questioned Blues Traveler as a suitable major festival headliner in the year 2009, the band proved on Saturday night that they’ve still got their H.O.R.D.E. tour chops. All of John Popper‘s past dramas haven’t affected his harp playing, and while “Run Around” and “Hook” came off tired, “But Anyway” sounded good as new. Popper brought out Survivorman‘s Les Stroud to jam with him, and the outdoor badass/TV star showed up and held his own with America’s most famous harmonica player in one of the weekend’s most anticipated (and downright cool) moments.

Three days in, we danced as hard as we could to The Dynamites featuring Charles Walker before crashing hard.

Continue reading for Sunday’s coverage of FloydFest…

Sunday, 07.26

Peter Rowan :: FloydFest 8

Sunday began slumped in a chair for some hair-of-the-dog with Adrienne Young‘s soothing voice and banjo playing. The casual, unpretentious bluegrass of her band, The Old Faithful, was perfect for the blustery, sunny Sunday morning.

The wind soon blew in more rain, forcing The Horse Flies off stage and sending much of the crowd running for shelter from the deluge. Fortunately, the Flies and the audience returned within the hour. The Ithaca, NY band plays ancient instruments, from a rough-looking banjo/ukulele to a vintage fiddle. Highlighted by “Last Train to Rajastan,” their show took acoustic music and dipped it in pure psychedelic syrup. It’s a wild ride.

Peter Rowan commenced the final hours at Floyd, clearly having fun throughout yodel improvisations and a tongue-in-cheek gospel tune that announced, “We’re chopping down the trees for Jesus.” He later told us, “This is the most fun we’ve had all summer,” and it seemed like the truth.

After packing up, we stuck around briefly for Railroad Earth, a perfect close to an idyllic weekend.

FloydFest manages to pull off a large-tier festival (15,000 through the gates was the estimate) while maintaining a small-fest vibe. From the first songs to the last, there’s never a moment when there isn’t world-class music being performed, including when the entire festival’s power dies. The bands just grab their instruments and take to the field, while the audience gathers around. Like so many of the bands that played over the four days, young and veteran, if FloydFest can maintain its character as it continues to grow it’s inspiring to think of what awaits us in years to come.

Continue reading for a few more pics of FloydFest…

Drew Emmitt, Bill Nershi & Michael Kang

Michael Kang

Les Stroud & John Popper – Blues Traveler

Grace Potter

Veggie Food

Boulder Acoustic Society

Yard Dogs Road Shows by Ryan Snyder

Donna The Buffalo

The Duhks

Grupo Fantasma

Sol Driven Train

Drew Heller – Toubab Krewe

William Walter & Co.

Yarn

Railroad Earth

JamBase | Land of the Lovers

Go See Live Music!



Rep. Earl Blumenauer: Unhinged!

Three or four times a month I will preside over House proceedings. While this can occasionally be repetitious, I find it to be a fascinating…

Earliest Wodehouse satires found

Writings from 100 years ago emerge to cast new light on the author’s politics

The discovery of four satirical “playlets” by PG Wodehouse, seen by the public for the first time in 100 years this weekend, prove that the humorist – who is often viewed as apolitical – had a strong interest in public affairs from his youth.

Wodehouse is best known as the creator of the all-knowing Jeeves and his egregious boss, Bertie Wooster. However, the four sketches, written between 1904 and 1907 – and complete with lampooning songs – show he was closely engaged with British politics and happy to function somewhat as the Have I Got News For You of his day.

In a meeting room at Calders bookshop on London’s South Bank yesterday, Wodehouse fans from across Europe met to read the playlets for the first time with the man who found them, literary historian Paul Spiring.

Wodehouse, or “Plum” as he was known to friends, used the sketches to parody the debate of the time about tariff reform and proposed changes to tax law that split the Conservative government, and led to a Liberal landslide in 1906.

He wrote the sketches with his friend Bertram Fletcher Robinson, known as “Bobbles”, and they were published in the Daily Express and Vanity Fair before disappearing into publisher archives. Hilary Bruce, chairman of the Wodehouse Society, is among those keen to see the works. “Lovers of literature, be they scholars or simply voracious readers, are always delighted when early or little known works are collected and republished,” she said.

“Scholars welcome comparison between early and later works. Wodehouse was just 22 when the first of these satires was published, and that makes them interesting to us now.”

In later life the author faced angry public accusations, including from writer AA Milne, that he had sympathised with the Nazi regime in Germany.

During a period of internment in what is now Poland, Wodehouse made a series of light-hearted broadcasts that were viewed by critics as treason. His supporters, including George Orwell, defended Wodehouse by saying he was naive and not interested in politics. It is now clear this was not the case. “People who enjoy Wodehouse like to think he was apolitical, but actually as a young man he was highly attuned to the political nuances of the day,” said Robert McCrum, author of the biography, Wodehouse: A Life

“He was conservative with a small ‘c’ – a supporter of Joseph Chamberlain and tariff reform. But he had started out as a journalist and was alert to controversy, and could always write to commission.”

While Wodehouse was politically aware, McCrum suggests that the writer would have been happy to deliver pieces to suit the political position of the owners of the Daily Express.

“He would turn his hand to anything that paid, and do it well. He was ambidextrous when it came to writing, and not snooty. But more than anything at that time, he liked writing funny poems and lyrics.”

Wodehouse’s father was in the civil service in India, but not wealthy enough to send his son to Oxford. As a result, the young Wodehouse worked in a bank after leaving school. He hated the work, and took up writing in his spare time, hoping to establish a career that would free him from a life in finance.

As one of the first modern “freelance” writers, Wodehouse went on to satirise politicians in the character of Roderick Spode, 7th Earl of Sidcup and leader of the “Black Shorts”, who appears in several Jeeves stories.

The new playlets were discovered, one by one, during four years of research by Spiring, who is also an expert on the work of Arthur Conan Doyle. He came across the first Wodehouse sketch almost by chance. “They all followed from a successful set of poems he had written known as the Parrot Poems,” he said.

“They are quite powerful and show that he was very much a supporter of the Tariff Reform League and pro-Chamberlain. His writing has often given people the impression that he was above politics. But the songs show that he was quite astute.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Rep. Earl Blumenauer: Stop Distorting the Truth about End of Life Care

Those with no solutions and no answers for how to reform our health care system are hijacking positive, bipartisan efforts that have contributed to a…

Earl Ofari Hutchinson: No Apology Needed President Obama for Speaking Out on Gates

President Obama may have used the wrong words when he called the actions of the Cambridge Police Sgt. James Crawley in cuffing Harvard Professor…

Sat Eye Candy: Queen

RIFF GENERATING GENIUS TURNS 62 TOMORROW

Queen is one of those rock bands so rippled into what we consider that genre at this point that it seems too small a thing to call them “influential.” From strict radio fare to the more outre melange of Howlin Rain, of Montreal and My Morning Jacket, there’s Queen smiling out at us, all art spangled and power chord sweet. They are hard rock and tearful weepers, brainy concept makers and silly song slingers – an incongruous, unapologetically massive swirl of elements that didn’t exist before them but surely survives in myriad permutations today.

This Sunday, July 19, is guitarist Brian May‘s 62nd birthday and we couldn’t let the weekend pass without raising a glass to him. The Caucasian afro-ed picker is muscle and grace, so tough yet so tender and right up there with the greatest riff architects in history. Without May there’d be no Eddie Van Halen, Joe Satriani or many others – or at least they’d play with a certain significant part of their vocabulary stripped out. Since Queen’s self-titled 1973 debut, May has been nudging the genre in potent directions and we hope he gets the full measure of whatever birthday wish he makes this year when he blows out the candle.

We start this week with a crushing piece of so-wrong-it’s-right perfection from the boys. Just wait for May’s six-string blast that haymakers us 30 seconds in. And in hindsight, it’s not too tough to figure out which way the pendulum swung with ol’ Freddie, right?

While countless plays at sporting events and over film montages has stolen some of this classic’s thunder, presented here when the song was still fresh in 1981 at a famous Montreux performance it shows itself the pub-ready sing-along great that it is, emerging with saloon piano and a nigh irresistible lyric belted out by one of the finest frontmen ever.

Now this is some nasty guitar! The lead-off track from Queen’s debut has propulsive force in this 1977 live take at the legendary Earl’s Court.

One of the neat tricks Queen pulled off was remaining relevant through several decades. While this version lacks David Bowie‘s original vocal it does show Freddie’s crowd mastery before the band drops into a tight, kinda wistful rendition of the mega-hit.

“Can anybody find me somebody to love?” It’s a simple enough sentiment, and Queen excelled at tapping a wildly populist vein and this bit of miniature opera stands as perhaps their crowning jewel in a long line of fantastic love songs. This romp from 1982 at the Milton Keynes Bowl is appropriately, uh, enlarged for your pleasure.

Anyone who doubts Queen’s influence on metal and contemporary marvels like The Mars Volta need only peep this scorching 1977 performance of one of the band’s early best.

1976′s A Day At The Races – and companion precursor 1975′s A Night At The Opera – was where all the elements of Queen fully coalesced. The switchback rush of moods and styles is apparent from Races‘ opening pair, presented here in sterling live form.

All those post-gig hours spent in European discos paid off as 1980 rolled around and Queen discovered their funky side. Quite the outfit on Freddie on this one.

There’s an air of life-clinging energy to this 1989 single packed with compact, tasty playing from May and an impassioned Mercury lead vocal surely powered by his then-recent HIV diagnosis. In ways, this tune seems like Queen’s smackdown of the hair metal acts that invaded the 1980s, where they show how easily they could toss off something akin to but quite superior to anything Poison, Slaughter, et al. had to offer.

For all their pomp, they could be quite goofy, as witness by this loopy number (and matching video) from 1978′s Jazz chock full of pop culture references.

We wrap up this week’s installment with a pair of the band’s finest from A Night at the Opera. First, “something a bit heavier” and then a number that contains all the group’s charms, ambition and immense talent in one multifaceted marvel (offered below in both live and original, iconic video form). Thanks so much for the killer music, Mr. May.

And don’t forget, you can eyeball video sweetness 24/7 with JamBase TV.


Toubab Krewe Release “Fire”: Tour with Earl Smith

Toubab Krewe launches the second wave of summer tour with release of “Fire”
A new single featuring Jamaican legends Lukani, Earl Smith and Leroy Wallace


Toubab Krewe

Fresh from widely praised performances at Rothbury (read our review here), where members of the band joined The Dead on percussion during their headlining July 4th set, Toubab Krewe launches into the second leg of their summer tour with the release of a new single, “Fire.” The collaborative new song was recorded recently at reggae guitar legend Earl Smith‘s front porch home-studio in Kingston, Jamaica and features Lukani (vocals), Smith (guitar) and Leroy “Horsemouth” Wallace (drums).

Toubab Krewe kicks off the tour aboard the first annual Toubab Kruise in New York City on July 15. The band will bring its dance-party inducing fusion of rock ‘n’ roll and West African music to the boat as it sails along the East River, heading through the New York Harbor to the Statue of Liberty.

Special guest Earl Smith will join Toubab Krewe on guitar at all of the upcoming shows through August 1. Perhaps the most sought after guitarist in reggae, Smith has performed and recorded with everyone from Bob Marley, Jimmy Cliff, Peter Tosh and Burning Spear to more recent pop icons like Lauren Hill, Erykah Badu and Joss Stone.

Toubab Krewe plans to spend much of August in the studio recording a new full length album (details TBA).

An extensive fall tour is also in the works, with confirmed dates including the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco (October 8) and the Joshua Tree Music Festival (October 10).

A short video taken of the band’s time in Jamaica during the recording can be seen here:

Upcoming Summer Tour Dates:

07/15/09 Wed The Rocks Off Concert Cruise New York, NY

07/17/09 Fri Festivus for the Restivus (Manifestivus) Cabot, VT

07/18/09 Sat Festivus for the Restivus (Manifestivus) Cabot, VT

07/24/09 Fri Floyd Fest Floyd, VA

07/25/09 Sat Floyd Fest Floyd, VA

07/31/09 Fri Smith’s Olde Bar Atlanta, GA

08/01/09 Sat Smith’s Olde Bar Atlanta, GA

08/07/09 Fri Sweet Pea Festival Bozeman, MT

08/13/09 Thu Camp Barefoot Music Festival Gore, VA

08/14/09 Fri St. Clair Park Greensburg, PA

08/21/09 Fri The Blind Tiger Greensboro, NC

08/22/09 Sat The Blind Tiger Greensboro, NC

09/17/09 Thu Legend’s Music Hall Boone, NC

09/19/09 Sat Exit/In Nashville, TN

09/20/09 Sun Levitt Shell Memphis, TN

09/30/09 Wed Tractor Tavern Seattle, WA

10/08/09 Thu Great American Music Hall San Francisco, CA

10/10/09 Sat Joshua Tree Roots Music Festival Joshua Tree, CA

10/30/09 Fri Neighborhood Theatre Charlotte, NC

01/03/10 Sun Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/04/10 Mon Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/05/10 Tue Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/06/10 Wed Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/07/10 Thu Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

For more on Toubab Krewe see our recent feature/interview here.


Bodies of eight soldiers return to UK

Families see bodies carried from aircraft at RAF Lyneham as Prince Edward pays respects to dead soldiers

The bodies of eight British soldiers killed during the army’s bloodiest 24 hours in Afghanistan arrived back in the UK today.

The coffins of the men, three of whom were 18, arrived draped in union flags just after noon at RAF Lyneham in Wiltshire.

The families of the men were there to see their bodies carried from the CI7 aircraft. Prince Edward, the Earl of Wessex, was also at the base in his capacity as royal colonel of the 2nd Battalion The Rifles, with which five of the dead men served. A Buckingham Palace spokesman said he “wanted to pay his respects to those soldiers who sadly died”.

A private ceremony at the chapel of rest is being held this afternoon, before eight hearses drive through the Wiltshire town of Wootton Bassett, where crowds are already gathering to pay tribute to the men.

Five soldiers from 2nd Battalion The Rifles died near Sangin, in Helmand province, on Friday, in two “daisy-chain” explosions.

Corporal Jonathan Horne, 28, and Riflemen William Aldridge, 18, James Backhouse, 18, and Joseph Murphy, 18, were rescuing comrades from an earlier blast when a second device detonated.

Murphy was carrying Rifleman Daniel Simpson, 20 – who was injured by the first makeshift bomb – when both were killed in the following explosion.

Aldridge, from Bromyard, Herefordshire, was attempting to reach casualties from the first blast, despite being wounded himself.

Also returning on the C17 plane will be Corporal Lee Scott, 26, of 2nd Royal Tank Regiment, who died in an explosion on the same day just north of Nad-e-Ali during Operation Panther’s Claw.

The two other men were killed in separate incidents on Thursday. Private John Brackpool, 27, of the Prince of Wales’ Company, 1st Battalion Welsh Guards, was shot at Char-e-Anjir, near Lashkar Gah, while on sentry duty. Rifleman Daniel Hume, 22, of 4th Battalion The Rifles, was killed in an explosion while on foot patrol near Nad-e-Ali.

The hearses will drive to Wootton Bassett on their way to the John Radcliffe hospital, Oxford. Inquests into their deaths will be held in the coming weeks.

Crowds have appeared spontaneously in Wootton Bassett to pay their respects since the bodies of British service personnel started being brought back to Lyneham in 2007.

The mayor of Wootton Bassett, Steve Bucknell, said: “Every repatriation is a very sad event, whether it is one person or eight.

“What makes it so much sadder is when you see the friends and family of the fallen and it brings it home that these are real people with real lives – someone’s son, grandson, brother and father. They are going to leave a hole in many lives.”

He paid tribute to the “fantastic” people of Wootton Bassett. “They never fail to amaze me with their ability to always do the right thing,” he said.

Standing beneath a simple homemade tribute with bunting and newspaper clippings, Alison Aldridge, the aunt of Rifleman Aldridge, had brought eight red roses with her in tribute to all the men who fell.

“It is extremely sad that his life was taken so swiftly, but I take comfort from the fact that he had two very fulfilling years rather than a lifetime of regrets,” she said.

“It’s lovely that so many people are here – young and old. It’s amazing how so many young people here understand and respect what’s going on.”

Veteran Alan Pearson, 74, from Frome, Somerset, a former Royal Engineer, was attending a repatriation for the first time to pay his “respects to the lads and their families”.

“I think they should stay there [in Afghanistan] but I think they should give them better equipment – helicopters,” he said. “They are doing the right thing. If not then these devils are going to be over here, blowing us up.”

Yesterday Gordon Brown said the last few weeks of fighting in Helmand had been “a sad and difficult time” for Britain, but said it was right to press on and stop al-Qaida using Afghanistan as a base.

His words came after a total of 15 soldiers died in Afghanistan in 10 days, bringing the total number of UK military fatalities in the country since 2001 to 184, surpassing the 179 who died in Iraq.

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Sometymes Why:Your Heart Is A Glorious Machine

By: Dennis Cook

“I’m gonna take you home and have my way with you/ This will be a memory that’s gonna stay with you.”

Seduction can rarely be consciously manufactured. The real deal fills our senses and inspires unreasonable, perhaps even unwise reactions, but lordy it feels good. Sometymes Why‘s new album, Your Heart Is A Glorious Machine (released March 10 on Signature Sounds), opens with the above line and then seeps, pheromone-like, into the listener – unrushed, warm to the touch, prickly in captivating ways, expertly executed throughout. Trust me, you’re pretty much done for when this trio – Kristin Andreassen (Uncle Earl), Aoife O’Donovan (Crooked Still) and Ruth Ungar Merenda (The Mammals) – starts working their wiles on you.

There’s a gorgeous, subtle overlap to this collaboration that suggests nothing less than an estrogen rich answer to early Crosby, Stills & Nash, where each primary is so strong they’d handily hold the spotlight alone but taken together they’re harmoniously lethal, serving consistently excellent material and keeping the arrangements and production airy, their fantastic, character rich voices never overshadowed by any other element. That said, their instrument switching instincts are spot-on, knowing just when to add a shimmer of tambourine, bell toned glockenspiel or heartbeat drum to the largely acoustic settings. Early Joni Mitchell is the easy reference point, but Sometymes Why is tougher, less man-handled, more aware of their power and more willing to use it than that legendary waif of the canyon.

I’d hate to oversell Your Heart Is A Glorious Machine but if you vibe with any of the listed touchstones then you’re going to find lots to love here. Each pass reveals a new silken thread to pull, a great turn-of-phrase that wanders off with you into the night or a melody you can’t shake and don’t really want to. The sheer ‘why’ of this group is well worth pondering, and like the best lovers, they don’t spread out their secrets all at once, drawing us near for pillow talk and low dawn conversations that get at real things with a few tears and gentle kisses.

JamBase | Harmonized
Go See Live Music!


The Juan MacLean & Field Tour

The Juan MacLean and The Field co-headlining a full LIVE band U.S. Tour

Welcome back intelligent dance music, we’ve missed you. – Music OMH, February 2009

The Juan MacLean

After releasing the much anticipated The Future Will Come (due 4/21 on DFA Records), Juan MacLean and Nancy Whang take The Juan MacLean on the road this spring. Juan, Nancy and band will be playing tracks live from The Future Will Come, which Filter magazine described as “perfectly orchestrated and directed to achieve maximum mood and dance-ability.” If the weather doesn’t make you sweat, your dance moves will.

The Juan MacLean is co-headlining the tour with Stockholm’s Axel Willner, aka The Field (Kompakt). After breaking out of the “boy and his laptop” mold following a tour with !!!, Willner teamed up with friends – percussionist/bass player Dan Enqvist and multi-instrumentalist Andreas Söderstrom to see what they could accomplish playing together. Modernizing their kraut rock influences, The Field recorded Yesterday & Today, due out May 19 on Anti- Records.

Co-sponsored by Scion and Nooka Toys, this is one dance party you do not want to miss.
Speaking of Nooka Toys, The Juan MacLean will have their very own Nooka Nooka Toy designed by Mike Vadino, who also designed the album cover for The Future Will Come.

The Juan Maclean and The Field US Tour Dates:

05/21: Cambridge, MA @ Middle East Downstairs

05/22: Philadelphia, PA @ Pure

05/23: Washington, DC @ Black Cat

05/25: Atlanta, GA @ The Earl

05/27: Miami, FL @ Liv @ Fountainbleu

05/29: Austin, TX @ The Mohawk

05/30: Houston, TX @ Numbers

05/31: Lobbock, TX @ Cactus Courtyard

06/03: San Diego, CA @ Casbah

06/04: Pomona, CA @ The Glass House

06/05: Los Angeles, CA @ Avalon Hollywood

06/06: San Francisco, CA @ Mezzanine

06/07: Portland, OR @ Doug Fir Lounge

06/08: Seattle, WA @ Nectar Lounge

06/09: Vancouver, BC @ Richards on Richards

06/11: Salt Lake City, UT @ Urban Lounge

06/12: Denver, CO @ Beta

06/13: Aspen, CO @ Belly Up

06/16: Chicago, IL @ Double Door

06/17: Cleveland, OH @ Grog Shop

06/18: Toronto, ON @ Tattoo

06/19: Montreal, QC @ Les Saints